All That We See or Seem

by

416 pages

English language

Published 2025 by Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers.

ISBN:
978-1-6680-8319-2
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Award­-winning author Ken Liu returns with his first scifi thriller in a brand-new series following former “orphan hacker” Julia Z as she is thrust into a high-stakes adventure where she must use her AI-whispering skills to unravel a virtual reality mystery, rescue a kidnapped dream artist, and confront the blurred lines between technology, selfhood, and the power of shared dreams.

Julia Z, a young woman who gained notoriety at fourteen as the “orphan hacker,” is trying to live a life of digital obscurity in a quiet Boston suburb.

But when a lawyer named Piers—whose famous artist wife, Elli, has been kidnapped by dangerous criminals—barges into her life, Julia decides to put the solitary life she has painstakingly created at risk as she can’t walk away from helping Piers and Elli, nor step away from the challenge of this digital puzzle. Elli is an oneirofex, a dream artist, who …

2 editions

Nice hacking thriller

( em português: sol2070.in/2025/12/all-that-we-see-or-seem/ )

All That We See or Seem (2025, 416 pages), by Ken Liu, is the first novel in the Julia Z series, about a young Chinese American hacker a few decades into the future.

Liu is an acclaimed and bestselling sci-fi and fantasy author in the U.S., also known for the stories that inspired the cult animated series Pantheon[^1].

In the book, a new celebrity in the “vivid dreaming” business disappears under suspicious circumstances. She had ties to a criminal specializing in mass manipulation, someone who manufactures cultural and political phenomena in digital-influence farms staffed with genuinely human—non-bot—interactions. Recovering from traumatic experiences, hacker Julia Z would rather stay out of it, but ends up drawn into the case.

The story reflects heavily on today’s platformized digital mass culture and the worship of influencers, since the central mystery involves the disappearance of …

Not all I hoped

So, I have loved everything I've read from Ken Lui but this... Didn't do it for me.

I would hesitate to call it sci-fi - it was a thriller which is a genre I'm not entirely au fait with and that was why I was less than impressed...

The sci-fi elements felt oddly split - the idea that AI would only work in domain-specific areas rings true (for the near future setting it's building), but other aspects felt fantastical and abilities pulled out the backside when needed (her multi-form drone thing)

Add to that a main character who seems able to do anything technical -hardware engineering, adapting tech, software) with a high degree of competence and who has built their general purpose AI assistant who can cope with multiple domains seemingly better than any other AI out there... Just... Meh

But don't let this put you …